fake blood

I’m waiting for someone to add this entry to the (mostly stupid, but that’s another post) blog Stuff White People Like: #82: Writing Memoirs In The Voice Of Underprivileged Youth. First there was teen truck-stop prostitute JT Leroy, a.k.a. a middle-aged woman from San Francisco. I had some strong thoughts about that little scandal. Now there’s half-Native American former Bloods gang member Margaret B. Jones, a.k.a. Margaret Seltzer, a white woman from Sherman Oaks who went to private school.

Supposedly, Seltzer wrote the memoir to give voice to friends who’d actually had experiences like those she described: “I just felt there was good that I could do and there was no other way that someone would listen to it.”

Here are some tips for the would-be Seltzers of the world:

  • If you want to help gang members in the foster care system, volunteer with gang members in the foster care system. Don’t get famous pretending to be one.
  • If you want to pretend to be a gang member in the foster care system, write a novel about a gang member in the foster care system. If it’s good, it will get published. If it can only get published as a memoir, it’s probably on the prurient side.
  • Or, write a journalistic book that profiles gang members in the foster care system in the tradition of Adrian Nicole LeBlanc’s Random Family, a story about life in the hood that reads like a novel but was written by someone who never pretended to be from the hood herself.

Here’s a tip for the would-be publishers of the would-be Seltzers:

  • Fact check, fuckers. We know you have the resources and the lawyers, so if you don’t, we know you want to capitalize on the author’s sob story, then capitalize on the scandal, then leave the author to clean up the mess on her own.

Here are some tips for readers:

  • Read real memoirs by real former gang members, like Always Running by Luis Rodriguez and Monster by Sanyika Shakur. Know that they don’t always have happy endings. Rodriguez is a successful writer who speaks regularly and inspiringly to kids in juvie and runs Tia Chucha’s bookstore and cultural center. But at the end of Shakur’s memoir, he was still locked up, and in 2007 he was arrested again.
  • Read real memoirs by people who are out about their whiteness and middle class-ness, like Truth and Beauty by Ann Patchett and Another Bullshit Night in Suck City by Nick Flynn. Know that they can have difficult and interesting lives too.
  • Read fiction. Just because it didn’t happen doesn’t mean it’s not real.

Here’s a tip for gang members in the foster care system:

  • Tell your story. Otherwise the Seltzers of the world—or your social worker or your probation officer—will try to do it for you, and no matter how good their intentions are, they won’t do it as well.

Comments

Jesi said…
me again...

granted i'm not pretending to be someone else... i do agree people should try and write fiction... i don't know. i guess i don't care that much. maybe we should start copyrighting our lives.
the last noel said…
Pretty strong words--and I completely agree. I was beside myself when I heard about that. And don't get me started on that JT crap.
the last noel said…
Oh, and Jesi, there's nothing wrong with lying--writers do it all the time. Just call it FICTION. What those people did was called it memoir or pretend to say it was true when it wasn't. It's not okay to me that someone says he's my brother, when he was some asshole milking me for money and sympathy.

Re: "White have been stealing from black shamelessly since forever." Let me guess, you're for the war, don't care about the people who get killed--as long as you can drive your car with their oil. And people wonder why we're called "Ugly Americans." Sheesh!
Claire said…
I love autobiographies, so I'd be pissed to read one by a faker. People should fess up to ghost-writers too, imo.

The bandana pic reminded me of shooting on location in the southside of LA. I always used to carry a bandana when it was hot out, but our AD reminded us to not wear/display red or blue there.
Cheryl said…
J: It's true that writing is an act of theft, and people can't help what they're influenced by. But I think you can be an ethical thief--like you said, by not pretending to be someone you're not, and also by championing the voices of people who don't have access to systems of distribution. I.e., I don't think it's wrong that white people started playing rock and roll. I do think it's wrong that club owners wouldn't book black artists, which meant that only white people (for many years) could get famous playing rock and roll.

N: Yeah, I can't help but think that if people didn't have such a weird bias against fiction that some of these authenticity scandals wouldn't have happened.

C: I wear bandanas of all colors when I jog; I'm pretty sure I'm way too dorky looking for any gang to want to claim me.
Don Cummings said…
I love Joyce Carol Oates' THEM. Amazing.
Cheryl, your points are so clear and right. Right.
Integrity, guys. Let's go.
Cheryl said…
Thanks, Don. I haven't read that book--it's going on my Amazon wish list. :-)
Jesi said…
btw, Sarah is in the Fiction/Lit part in the bookstore. it was never considered a memoir or non-fic. i still don't have a problem with it. sorry.
Cheryl said…
From what I understand, Sarah was originally marketed as a novel, but an autobiographical one--when it was in fact a non-autobiographical novel. Sort of a crazy thing to wrap your head around.

I don't have a literary beef with any of these books (and I wouldn't judge them without reading them anyway). They sound like pretty good reads, actually. My issue is with all the crap going on outside the pages. The great thing about books, of course, is that you can lose yourself in the narrative and leave all that behind. I just might check them out of the library instead of spending money to buy them. :-)
Jesi said…
the library is a good thing. that's why i love working at one.

i also work in a bookstore, and we sell all sorts of crap. for example: Men are from mars, women are from venus, The Secret, Atkins Diet. i would much rather people read Sarah, or A million little pieces than that crap!
Jesi said…
and please read Sarah instead of Ann Coulter. her books are considered non-fic and are in the Politics and Gov't section. god, how i would love to burn them.
Cheryl said…
Don't worry, Ann Coulter is not on my Amazon wish list.
Tracy Lynn said…
I would agree with everything you say, Cheryl,but I'm not sure if my opinion is worth much in this arena. I don't generally read the kinds of novels that qualify as fiction these days. I generally find that I'm spending almost all my book finding time in the genre sections. Fantasy, science fiction, thrillers, humor, horror- this seems to me to be the places where the stories are told that I find entertaining.
Cheryl said…
You know, all this skepticism about the truthfulness of memoirs is going to make it really hard for the first autobiography by a real centaur/time traveler/vampire.
Stuff White People Like is the BESTEST BLOG EVER!
Cheryl said…
Some of it is pretty funny, but they really need to call it "Stuff Upper-Middle-Class Urban Liberals Like"--because there are plenty of non-white folks who go to grad school, and plenty of white folks who couldn't care less about their children being multilingual. I know stereotyping is sort of the whole point of it, but you have to be precise with your stereotypes in order to be funny.
Ms. Q said…
Can we get a Cheryl bumper sticker that says "Fact-check Fuckers" ?
Please?

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